Aeroflot Flight 3843 Explained

Aeroflot Flight 3843
Type:Left engine fire leading to a loss of flight controls
Occurrence Type:Accident
Occupants:90
Passengers:82
Crew:8
Fatalities:90[1]
Survivors:0
Tail Number:СССР-42369
Destination:Almaty Airport

Aeroflot Flight 3843 was a Soviet Union commercial flight that crashed on January 13, 1977, after a left engine fire near Almaty Airport. All 90 people on board perished in the crash.[2]

Aircraft and crew

The aircraft involved in the accident was a Tupolev Tu-104B, registered СССР-42369 to Aeroflot. The aircraft was delivered to Aeroflot on October 31, 1958. At the time of the accident, the aircraft had accumulated 27,189 flight hours and 12,819 landings in service.[3]

The flight crew consisted of a captain, a first officer, two navigators and a flight engineer; three flight attendants were stationed in the cabin.

Accident sequence

Flight 3843 was a service from Khabarovsk to Almaty via Novosibirsk. The aircraft departed for the second leg of its flight from Novosibirsk at 17:13 on January 13, 1977. At 40km (30miles) from Almaty airport the aircraft was at an altitude of 2100m (6,900feet). Witnesses noticed the left engine of the aircraft on fire about 15km (09miles) from the airport. With the wing still on fire, it then climbed from about 600-1NaN-1 to 1000-1NaN-1 before diving and exploding in a snow-covered field.[4] The sky above the airport at the time was clear, although due to the haze visibility was at 1850m (6,070feet). The aircraft hit the ground at an angle of 28° with a roll, at a speed of 150- and rotated 200-210° with respect to the runway axis. The fuselage broke in two; the front part of the fuselage sank into the ground 2m (07feet). The rear of the fuselage with the tail assembly was pushed back 18m (59feet) and not burned in the fire. Forensic examinations showed that the passengers were exposed to carbon monoxide during the flight.

Investigation

The accident board found the aircraft's left engine had been subjected to fire for 10–15 minutes. The fire increased upon slowing down to land due to a decrease in the air flow, damaging the controls. The aircraft stalled and crashed three kilometers short of the airport.

References

43.3764°N 77.1028°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Катастрофа Ту-104А Дальневосточного УГА в районе а/п Алма-Ата. 17 November 2016.
  2. Web site: ASN Aircraft accident Tupolev 104A СССР-42369 Alma-Ata Airport (ALA). . . 9 August 2016.
  3. Web site: Туполев Ту-104А Бортовой №: СССР-42369. russianplanes.net. 2016-12-02.
  4. Web site: Катастрофа Ту-104А Дальневосточного УГА в районе а/п Алма-Ата. www.airdisaster.ru. 2016-12-02.